Leading From The Heart

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Do Something Great

It’s a messy thing, this democracy of ours. Government of the people, by the people and for the people is beautiful yet fearsome to behold. When a country is founded upon freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and equality for all, fierce disagreements, chaos, confusion, political posturing, and down and dirty fighting are inevitable.

That’s why I love Presidents’ Day, a federal holiday honoring the birthday of our first President, George Washington. It reminds me how precious our freedom is, especially when we are not of one mind. The first Presidents’ Day was celebrated on Washington’s actual birthday, Feb. 22, 1796, during the last full year of his presidency. Today the holiday honors George Washington and Abraham Lincoln in particular as well as all of our other presidents.

“I am keenly aware of my aloneness.” In the movie Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln thus describes to his wife a dream he had in January 1865, shortly before his inauguration for a second term. The number of dead continued to mount in the Civil War where 750,000 people died, which was almost 2.5 percent of the U.S. population at the time or the equivalent of 7.5 million people today. The pain of every death weighed upon his heart.

The toll of this brutal war would not be redeemed unless slavery was ended, but it was not assured simply by a military victory for the North. Lincoln was committed to keeping the Union together as well as abolishing slavery, which was deliberately omitted from the U.S. Constitution a century before as an unsolvable problem.

Lincoln had declared that all slaves were free in his January 1, 1863 Emancipation Proclamation, but it was merely a proclamation. If the13th Amendment to the Constitution were not passed before the Civil War ended, Lincoln would no longer have the authority of War Powers, in which case the Emancipation Proclamation could be declared illegal, throwing the country back into the abyss.

Abraham Lincoln was a mysterious, complex man: private, intuitive, politically shrewd, and profoundly relational. Unlike George Washington, who was one of the richest men in America, Lincoln was a most unlikely president, pulling himself out of poverty by his proverbial bootstraps. Lincoln had almost no formal education, mourned the death of his first love, failed in business, and had bouts of melancholy. Only one of his four children lived to adulthood.

In Lincoln we see one of our greatest presidents lead this country through one of our darkest moments by allowing his God-given gifts to guide him. First, Abraham Lincoln was a man of acute emotional intelligence. He was the quintessential non-anxious presence who virtually always remained calm and centered even when the storm raged around him.

Much of Lincoln is based on Doris Kearns Goodwin’s biography, Teams of Rivals; The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. Goodwin writes that when Abraham Lincoln won the 1860 presidential election he appointed to his cabinet three men who had competed with him for the Republican presidential nomination: New York Senator William H. Seward, Ohio Governor Salmon P. Chase, and Missouri’s distinguished elder statesman Edward Bates. There was rivalry, competition, and outright fighting among Cabinet members, but Lincoln managed the intensity of his team with kindness, an open mind, encouragement, and gratitude for the skills each man brought to the table.

Although the decision to seek passage of the 13th Amendment was his alone, Lincoln knew that without input and counsel from others the goal could not be accomplished. Lincoln had an uncanny ability to individually connect with his cabinet and lawmakers from both ends of the political spectrum. Because he was not threatened by a variety of perspectives, Lincoln was able to build trust and form coalitions that accrued political capital. Whether in politics, business, the church, or our families, it’s always about relationships, isn’t it?

Lincoln’s “Honest Abe” reputation did not put him above the nitty-gritty of cutthroat politicking, however. Republicans constituted 56% of the House of Representatives, but they needed a 2/3 vote. Lincoln’s team did whatever was necessary to win, including arm-twisting, bullying, offering patronage jobs to Democrats, or threatening other lawmakers if they were resistant.

A second gift of Abraham Lincoln was an inner moral compass that pointed him toward true north. Thaddeus Stevens was by most accounts the fiercest opponent of slavery and had the sharpest tongue in Congress. Because Lincoln was committed to both ending slavery and preserving the Union, he planned a careful strategy to pass the 13th Amendment. However, by 1865 Stevens described Lincoln as “the capitulating compromiser, the dawdler.”

In a memorable scene between Stevens and Lincoln, Stevens argued eloquently that all men and women, whether in the north or south, should listen to their inner moral compass. That compass, Stevens continued, points toward True North, to the truth that all people are created equal and slavery should be abolished.

Lincoln’s reply demonstrated his political genius. “The compass may point true north, but it does not warn us of obstacles and swamps along the way. If we plunge ahead without heeding the obstacles we could sink in a swamp… and then what good is true north?” In other words, doing the right thing is not always a straight road. When both sides are convinced they are right, barriers will usually appear that hinder the road to True North. If Lincoln had plowed heedlessly ahead without caution, prudent negotiation, and getting everyone on board, the path to equality might well have become sidetracked.

A third gift that undergirded Lincoln’s presidency was his deep compassion for the suffering of an entire country. At the end of his Second Inaugural Address on March 4, 1865, Lincoln said, “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”

Lincoln insisted that there be no retribution shown to the South after the war was over. In the movie, Lincoln speaks to General Ulysses S. Grant at the end of the war, “Once he surrenders, send his boys back to their homes, their farms, their shops… Liberality all around. No punishment, I don’t want that. And the leaders – Jeff and the rest of ‘em – if they escape, leave the country while my back’s turned, that wouldn’t upset me none. When peace comes it mustn’t just be hangings.”

Abraham Lincoln understood the importance of religion in public life and had considerable contact with preachers of various denominations. Lincoln’s theology was eclectic and his spirituality authentic. Lincoln knew who his True North was and relied on God’s power to give him wisdom and grace to lead the country.

On May 18, 1864, Lincoln wrote a letter in his own penmanship to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Baltimore, which had passed a resolution of encouragement and sent it to Mr. Lincoln. This was his reply,

“Gentlemen: In response to your address allow me to attest the accuracy of its historical statements; endorse the sentiment it expresses; and thank you in the nation’s name for the sure promise it gives. Nobly sustained as the Government has been by all the churches, I would utter nothing which might in the least appear invidious against any. Yet without this it may fairly be said that the Methodist Episcopal Church, not less devoted than the rest, is, by its greater numbers, the most important of all. It is no fault in others that the Methodist Church sends more soldiers to the field, more nurses to the hospital, and more prayers to heaven than any. God bless the Methodist Church, bless all the churches, and blessed be God, who, in this our great trial, giveth us the churches.”

Abraham Lincoln was a regular attender at New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, four blocks from the White House. In order to assure privacy for Lincoln during Wednesday night prayer services, Rev. Phineas Gurley allowed the president to sit in the pastor’s study with the door open to the chancel so he could listen to the sermon without having to interact with the crowd.

One Wednesday evening as Lincoln and a companion walked back to the White House after the sermon, the president’s companion asked, “What did you think of tonight’s sermon?”

“No,” Lincoln replied. “It failed. It failed because Dr. Gurley did not ask us to do something great.”

The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution passed the House of Representatives on January 31, 1865. President Abraham Lincoln asked the House of Representatives to do something great so that our country would become something great. Despite his assassination on April 15, 1865 Abraham Lincoln changed the course of human history. Lincoln’s legacy will forever inspire and encourage ordinary people like you and me to discover our truest self in Jesus Christ and make a positive difference in our world. Do something great.

5 thoughts on “Do Something Great”

Very thoughtful and more than thought-provoking – action provoking. Thanks, Laurie. In times of great political distress, it is easy to fall into the very posturing we so easily condemn in others. Lincoln learned early in his career to avoid that, so he is an excellent exemplar to follow today. And if we do not inspire ourselves and others to do something great, someone will surely inspire us to do something awful.

Laurie,
That was a GREAT “Leading from the Heart” posting! I enjoyed the movie “Lincoln” so much and your presentation here made my understanding of that movie even better. Lincoln: no formal education but wisdom beyond the ages. What a person!

In times of trouble, Washington during the Revolutionary War, Lincoln during the Civil War and Roosevelt during the Second World War, our country seems to be so lucky to have great leaders arise to meet our needs.

Laurie, you have an uncanny ability to think most clearly on events which have shaped our history. Lincoln had a very difficult time trying to get the North and South together following the war. The tragedy is he did not live to see that to fruition. I;m not sure we are there completely yet but working toward that end. I see a “house divided” in our political thinking. Too bad every opinion can’t be recognized as
valuable-if only to reinforce strong values we hold sacred. I am the mom and mother- in- law of Steve and Aileen Leipprandt. They speak very highly of you and I am happy they have the advantage of your wonderful influence! You have made a difference in their lives and the lives of their children. GOD Bless You!!

Really enjoyed this posting as I just saw Lincoln on Sunday evening. I was struck by some similarities to another great leader Nelson Mandela in terms of Lincoln’s desire that the leaders and soldiers of the south not be persecuted – “Lincoln insisted that there be no retribution shown to the South after the war was over.” When Mandela came to power he went to great lengths to ensure the prior gov’t and white people were not disenfranchised. A lesson for all of us. If you want to read an excellent account of Mandela’s leadership style I recommend “Madela’s Way” an easy ready with great lessons.

I have found this an excellent treatise on Lincoln and moral fortitude and have passed it on to some of the school age history buffs in our family. Hopefully they can become better informed with broader readings (yours) and contribute by ‘doing something great’. I have confidence in our youth to do just that!-